Produktbild: Aquaculture Nutrition

Aquaculture Nutrition Gut Health, Probiotics and Prebiotics

Fr. 242.00

inkl. gesetzl. MwSt., Versandkostenfrei


Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

20.10.2014

Herausgeber

Daniel L. Merrifield + weitere

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons

Seitenzahl

488

Maße (L/B/H)

24.4/17/2.5 cm

Gewicht

1126 g

Auflage

1. Auflage

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-470-67271-6

Beschreibung

Rezension

"The book presents key, up to date information about the gut microbiota of aquatic animals, how they may be studied and about the possible applications of probiotics and prebiotics in aquaculture. The book's main advantage is that the information is collated within a single volume, so Aquaculture Nutrition: Gut health, probiotics and prebiotics is likely to find a niche as a source of reference that will be used by fish nutritionists and other aquaculture professionals." ( A quaculture International , 10 December 2014)

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

20.10.2014

Herausgeber

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons

Seitenzahl

488

Maße (L/B/H)

24.4/17/2.5 cm

Gewicht

1126 g

Auflage

1. Auflage

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-470-67271-6

Herstelleradresse

Produktsicherheitsverantwortliche/r
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Aquaculture Nutrition
  • List of Contributors xi

    Preface xv

    1 The Gastrointestinal Tract of Fish 1
    Arun Kumar Ray and Einar Ringo

    1.1 Introduction 1

    1.2 Anatomy of GI tract 2

    1.3 Stomach and intestinal bulb 3

    1.4 Pyloric caeca 5

    1.5 Intestine 6

    1.6 Endogenous inputs of digestive secreta 9

    1.7 Luminal pH 10

    1.8 Passage rate and residence time 10

    1.9 Acknowledgements 10

    2 Immune Defences of Teleost Fish 14
    Andrew Foey and Simona Picchietti

    2.1 Introduction 14

    2.2 Innate immunity 15

    2.3 Antigen-specific adaptive immunity 18

    2.4 Cytokines drive immune responsiveness 22

    2.5 Immune tissues 23

    2.6 Mucosal immunity 32

    2.7 Common pathogens infecting teleosts: what immune responses are required? 36

    2.8 Future considerations 39

    2.9 Conclusion 40

    3 Gastrointestinal Pathogenesis in Aquatic Animals 53
    Jarl Bogwald and Roy Ambli Dalmo

    3.1 Introduction 53

    3.2 Vibrio spp. 54

    3.3 Aeromonas spp. 61

    3.4 Yersinia ruckeri 63

    3.5 Edwardsiella spp. 63

    3.6 Piscirickettsia salmonis 64

    3.7 Pseudomonas anguilliseptica 65

    3.8 Photobacterium damsela subsp. Piscicida (Pasteurella Piscicida) 65

    3.9 Streptococcosis 66

    3.10 'Candidatus arthromitus' 66

    3.11 Mycobacterium spp. 66

    3.12 Conclusion 68

    4 The Gut Microbiota of Fish 75
    Jaime Romero, Einar Ringo and Daniel L. Merrifield

    4.1 Introduction 75

    4.2 The importance of the microbiota 84

    4.3 Composition of the microbiota in early life stages 86

    4.4 Factors that influence microbiota composition 88

    4.5 Conclusion 93

    5 Methodological Approaches Used to Assess Fish Gastrointestinal Communities 101
    Zhigang Zhou, Bin Yao, Jaime Romero, Paul Waines, Einar Ringo, Matthew Emery, Mark R. Liles and Daniel L. Merrifield

    5.1 Culture-dependent approaches 102

    5.2 Molecular techniques 106

    5.3 Fluorescence based methods 115

    5.4 Electron microscopy 115

    5.5 Microbial activity and functionality 117

    5.6 Summary 120

    5.7 Acknowledgements 120

    6 Indigenous Lactic Acid Bacteria in Fish and Crustaceans 128
    Daniel L. Merrifield, Jose Luis Balcazar, Carly Daniels, Zhigang Zhou, Oliana Carnevali, Yun-Zhang Sun, Seyed Hossein Hoseinifar and Einar Ringo

    6.1 Introduction 129

    6.2 Lactic acid bacteria 130

    6.3 Salmonidae 130

    6.4 Gadidae 141

    6.5 Clupeidae 143

    6.6 Anarhichadidae 143

    6.7 Acipenseridae 143

    6.8 Percidae and sciaenidae 144

    6.9 Moronidae 145

    6.10 Sparidae 145

    6.11 Pleuronectiformes 146

    6.12 Cyprinidae 146

    6.13 Channidae 149

    6.14 Siluriformes 150

    6.15 Cichlidae 150

    6.16 Serranidae 151

    6.17 Rachycentridae 151

    6.18 Mugilidae 152

    6.19 Coastal Fish 152

    6.20 Shellfish 153

    6.21 Summary 156

    7 Probiotics and Prebiotics: Concepts, Definitions and History 169
    Helene L. Lauzon, Arkadios Dimitroglou, Daniel L. Merrifield, Einar Ringo and Simon J. Davies

    7.1 Introduction 169

    7.2 The probiotic concept and history 170

    7.3 The prebiotic concept and definition 174

    7.4 Synbiotics 180

    7.5 Summary 180

    8 Probiotic Modulation of the Gut Microbiota of Fish 185
    Daniel L. Merrifield and Oliana Carnevali

    8.1 Introduction 185

    8.2 Bacillus spp. 187

    8.3 Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) 192

    8.4 Other probionts 206

    8.5 Probiotic colonization? 210

    8.6 Conclusion and future perspectives 213

    8.7 Acknowledgements 214

    9 Probiotic Applications in ColdWater Fish Species 223
    Helene L. Lauzon, Tania Perez-Sanchez, Daniel L. Merrifield, Einar Ringo and Jose Luis Balcazar

    9.1 Introduction 223

    9.2 Salmonidae 225

    9.3 Gadidae 234

    9.4 Pleuronectiformes 240

    9.5 Percidae 245

    9.6 Conclusion 245

    10 Probiotic Applications in Temperate and Warm Water Fish Species 253
    Oliana Carnevali, Yun-Zhang Sun, Daniel L. Merrifield, Zhigang Zhou and Simona Picchietti

    10.1 Introduction 253

    10.2 European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax L.) 255

    10.3 Gilthead sea bream (Sparus aurata L.) 258

    10.4 Probiotic applications in sole spp. 262

    10.5 Groupers 266

    10.6 Tilapia 269

    10.7 Carps 272

    10.8 Zebrafish (danio rerio) 275

    10.9 Catfishes 277

    10.10 General conclusions 279

    11 Probiotic Applications in Crustaceans 290
    Mathieu Castex, Carly Daniels and Liet Chim

    11.1 Introduction 290

    11.2 Main microorganisms evaluated and used as probiotics in crustacean aquaculture 293

    11.3 Probiotic modes of action 300

    11.4 Related benefits in crustacean aquaculture 308

    11.5 Conclusion 318

    12 Can Probiotics Affect Reproductive Processes of Aquatic Animals? 328
    Giorgia Gioacchini, Elisabetta Giorgini, Lisa Vaccari and Oliana Carnevali

    12.1 Introduction 328

    12.2 The fish reproductive system 329

    12.3 Broodstock reproductive dysfunctions 331

    12.4 Reproduction and metabolism 332

    12.5 The effects of probiotic applications on fish reproduction 333

    12.6 Concluding remarks 341

    12.7 Acknowledgements 341

    References 341

    13 Issues with Industrial Probiotic Scale-up 347
    Mathieu Castex, Henri Durand and Bernadette Okeke

    13.1 Introduction 347

    13.2 Scaling-up guidelines 349

    13.3 Mode of administration 354

    13.4 Probiotic registration 357

    14 Prebiotics in Finfish: An Update 360
    Einar Ringo, Arkadios Dimitroglou, Seyed Hossein Hoseinifar and Simon J. Davies

    14.1 Introduction 360

    14.2 Salmonidae 361

    14.3 Gadoids 365

    14.4 Acipenseridae 365

    14.5 Cyprinidae 369

    14.6 Siluriformes 376

    14.7 Moronidae 378

    14.8 Sparidae 380

    14.9 Cichlidae 384

    14.10 Sciaenidae 384

    14.11 Other fish species 387

    14.12 Synbiotics 389

    14.13 Concluding remarks and further perspectives 393

    15 Prebiotic Applications in Shellfish 401
    Carly Daniels and Seyed Hossein Hoseinifar

    15.1 Introduction 401

    15.2 Use of prebiotics in shellfish aquaculture 402

    15.3 Prebiotic benefits 409

    15.4 Conclusion 414

    16 Live Feeds: Microbial Assemblages, Probiotics and Prebiotics 419
    Jose Pintado, Miquel Planas and Pavlos Makridis

    16.1 Introduction 419

    16.2 Bacterial aspects of live feed 421

    16.3 Bacterial control of live feed cultures 424

    16.4 Enrichment of live feed and microbial implications 425

    16.5 Probiotics in live feed production 425

    16.6 Bioencapsulation of probiotics in live food and delivery to larvae 430

    16.7 Prebiotics and synbiotics in live feed 435

    16.8 Conclusions and future perspectives 436

    References 437

    Index 443